Today Sarajevo is the peaceful capital city of the nation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. If you didn’t know history you might be able to visit the city unaware of it’s terrifying past. But it wouldn’t take much observation to see the city’s bloody past  The scars of Sarajevo can still be seen as bullet holes on the walls of buildings and the sad eyes of those old enough to remember.

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During the Bosnia Civil War, the city of Sarajevo was held under siege for over 1,424 days. This is the longest siege of a capital city in modern history. During the siege which lasted from April of 1992 to February of 1996 13,952 civilians and military personnel had been killed and large portions of the city were laid to waste.

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The Holiday Inn one of the city’s most prominent features and a centerpiece when the city held the winter Olympics back in 1984 was a major target for Artillery Shells

From the end of World War II to the end of the cold war in the early 1990’s The federation of Yugoslavia had kept an unsteady peace by keeping the many nationalist tendencies of the nations various religious and ethnic groups in check. The nation was a conglomeration composed of Muslims, Catholics, and Eastern Orthodox communities each longing for their own homeland,  The nation used both the Cyrillic and Latin alphabets and spoke several different languages.  It wasn’t really an issue of if everything would fall apart but when. The country was held together for almost 40 years by strongman Marshal Tito who held everything together by sheer will. After his death in 1980, the slow unraveling began and reached a crescendo during the fall of communism in Eastern Europe in the early 90’s. As Yugoslavia devolved, one single nation became six (seven if you count Kosovo). Of all the new nations to break away, Bosnia and Herzegovina was by the most bloody. The Orthodox Bosnian  Serbs, mostly Catholic Croats, and Muslim Bosnians all vied for control.

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The city was almost entirely surrounded. Given the high artillery positions in the mountains, there wasn’t anywhere in the city that couldn’t be hit.

The city of Sarajevo is in a valley and the surrounding mountains were occupied by Bosnian Serbs and the city was shelled with artillery and sniper fire. Even within the city some Serbs had occupied buildings and created “sniper alleys”.

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Much of the city was nothing more than burned out homes, vehicles and rubble. 

Civilian and the military were targeted. According to reports, the city was hit with over 300 artillery shells a day.  For several years the city did not have any utility service or clean water and had to rely on airlifted supplies and a makeshift tunnel that had been built.

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The Sarajevo tunnel connected the city with the U.N. Occupied area outside of town. This was a lifeline or umbilical cord that kept the city supplied with food, water, and medicine. 

 

The civilian casualties caught the attention of the world that demanded something be done. Both the UN and NATO forces intervened. A cease-fire was reached in late 1995 and the siege formally ended in 1996. The toll the city took was severe over 13,000 deaths and 50,000 wounded and 10,000 missing and unaccounted for. Over 1,500 of the deaths were young children.

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These two pictures are of the Sarajevo children’s memorial which honors the hundreds of children killed in the siege. The city also has a Children’s War museum which is a must see,

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Over the last 23  years, the city has been rebuilt. A new generation has come of age. The city painstakingly rebuilt many of the historic buildings that had been destroyed.

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The restored Latin Bridge. On this bridge, Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated in 1914. His killing sparked the first World War. 
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The Gazi Husrev Beg Mosque. The city has a large Muslim Minority. A remnant of centuries of occupation by the Ottoman Turks
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Large portions of the city are fully restored. 
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The Galerija 11/07/95 honors those who were killed in Sarajevo and the massacre at Srebrenica
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The names of the many killed in the 1,425-day siege
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The faces of those killed in the massacre at Srebrenica.

The scars of Sarajevo serve as a warning to the world of the dangers of ethnic supremacy. We all share this world together, we have no other. 

3 Replies to “The scars of Sarajevo”

    1. I know, right. They pretty much rained verything they could at the city, artillery, rockets, and sniper fire. Much of the holes have been plastered over and refilled. The ones that remain are for one of three reasons: the buildings been abandonded, the owner is too poor to repair and some are left intentionally as a reminder.

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